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JCPSM puts off strike till July 13 

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Patients waiting for treatment at the National Hospital, Colombo, yesterday. (Pic by Thushara Atapattu).

 

By Rathindra Kuruwita

The Joint Council of Professions Supplementary to Medicine (JCPSM) yesterday suspended its strike after Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi agreed to present a Cabinet paper on their demands on 13 July 2021.

“She agreed to include our five main demands in the Cabinet paper. We decided to suspend the union action unitl 13 July and thereafter react, based on whether the Minister keeps her word,” President of the JCPSM, Ravi Kumudesh told The Island.

Kumudesh said that services of JCPSM personnel would resume work soon.

“When doctors try to interfere, there will be chaos in the system. The Health Ministry should keep this in mind,” he said.

The Government Medical Officers Association (GMOA) has warned union action if the government grants the demands made by nurses and the JCPSM members, without consulting the Salaries and Cadre Commission.

“There is a national policy on how ot handle such demands and the GMOA has always backed this mechanism.

Some nursing unions attempted to display their might recently and following their example other unions are now striking. If the government grants these demands there will be chaos,” Dr. Senal Fernando, Secretary to the GMOA said.

 

 



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Opposition holds NPP Cabinet responsible for coal scam, three times bigger than bond fraud

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Prof. G. L. Peiris

The Opposition yesterday called for the entire Cabinet-of-Ministers to accept responsibility for the coal scam. Addressing the media at the Flower Road Office of UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe, former Foreign Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris emphasised that Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody’s resignation, in the wake of the damning report issued by the National Audit Office (NAO), has now implicated the entire Cabinet-of-Ministers.

Prof. Peiris asserted that Jayakody, who had been indicted in the Colombo High Court over alleged corruption, during the Yahapalana administration, stepped down after the NPP failed to suppress the truth on the coal scam.

The ex-Minister declared that Jayakody’s resignation, the first since the formation of new government, with a super majority in Parliament, was a devastating setback for the current dispensation.

The internationally recognised legal scholar said that a future government would move courts against the entire NPP Cabinet. Referring to the NAO report submitted to Parliament, Prof. Peiris emphasised that there was absolutely no ambiguity regards allegations directed at the Energy Ministry. The NAO report proved that the Indian company, Trident Champhar, that won the major contract, didn’t even have the required registration.

Prof. Peiris said that the coal scam was three times bigger than the Treasury bond scams, perpetrated during the Yahapalana time (SF)

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Case against Yoshitha and Daisy Forrest postponed

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The Colombo High Court yesterday ordered that the case, filed under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act against Yoshitha Rajapaksa, son of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, and his grand-aunt Daisy Forrest Wickramasinghe, be recalled on June 10.

The case was taken up before High Court Judge Rashmi Singappuli.

At the hearing, State Counsel informed the court that a related case, on similar charges, had been filed before High Court No. 08. The court was further informed that a revised indictment has been directed to be filed in that case, necessitating the submission of a revised indictment in the present case as well.

State Counsel requested time to report on the progress of those proceedings.

Accordingly, the judge ordered that the case be called on June 10 and directed that progress be reported on that date.

The case pertains to three indictments filed by the Attorney General alleging that between March 31, 2009, and December 12, 2013, the accused had committed an offence under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act by depositing over Rs. 59 million in three private banks, the source of which could not be explained.

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Three-judge bench rejects request by ex-IGP Pujith

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 A three-judge bench of the Colombo Special High Court yesterday rejected a request by former Inspector General of Police (IGP) Pujith Jayasundera to introduce additional facts to a statement he had previously made from the dock.

Jayasundera is an accused in the case filed over alleged criminal negligence in failing to prevent the 2019 Easter Sunday terrorist attacks, despite prior intelligence warnings.

The order was delivered by the bench, presided over by Justice Priyantha Liyanage.

Meanwhile, retired Senior Deputy Inspector General (SDIG) Nandana Munasinghe and Deputy Inspector General (DIG) in charge of the Eastern Province, Waruna Jayasundera, appeared before court as defence witnesses.

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